| DeeDee Halleck on Thu, 22 Jul 2010 16:12:54 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| <nettime> The Culture Wars and Internet Governance |
From: Robin Gross <robin@ipjustice.org>
Date: Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 8:33 PM
Subject: IP Justice Comments on Morality & Public Order (MAPO) Objections in DAG4
To: NCSG-NCUC-DISCUSS@listserv.syr.edu
FYI: IP Justice Comments on DAG4 Morality & Public Order (MAPO)
Objections
RE: Remove MAPO Objections; Allow Nations to deal with MAPO and ICANN
to get on with new gtlds + protect free speech as a bonus
The DAG4 so-called Morality and Public Order (MAPO) objections to new
gtlds should be removed as illegitimate, outside ICANN's scope, likely
to expose ICANN to constant litigation, and chilling to freedom of
expression on the Internet.
As explained in Brussels by the US Representative to GAC: there simply
are no internationally recognized standards to legislate "morality and
public order". For ICANN to attempt to create any MAPO standards is
clearly outside of ICANN's mandate and its authority. ICANN risks
getting tangled-up in ugly political battles by trying to legislate
MAPO standards and it undermines ICANN's legitimacy to govern at all
by trying to legislate MAPO.
The proposal in DAGv4 for dealing with morality and public order is
"one-size-fits-all" in which anyone can block a new gltd because their
subjective sense of morality is offended. Obviously this is
practically unworkable and terribly over-restrictive. It does not make
sense for ICANN to block the creation of a top-level domain because
some countries chose not to access the content. Issues of morality and
public order are matters of national law. National legislatures and
national courts are the appropriate place to adjudicate what ideas may
be expressed and by whom. Neither ICANN, nor out-sourced dispute
resolution businesses (such as the International Chamber of Commerce)
have any right to prevent people and countries from making their own
choices about what information they wish to access. If a registration
violates a law that applies to that registration, it is easily
prohibited on legal grounds. Creating an additional level of MAPO-
based objections only invites arbitrariness, subjectivity and global
censorship.
The GNSO Recommendation F provides guidance on the GNSO's mandate for
new gtlds: "The string evaluation process must not infringe the
applicant's freedom of expression rights that are protected under
internationally recognized principles of law."
ICANN has an obligation to respect the free expression rights of
Internet users, which are nearly universally guaranteed through
various national constitutions and international treaties. In
particular, Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
speaks directly to ICANN on this issue: "Everyone has the right to
freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold
opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart
information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers."
Surely ICANN does not contend that the free expression guarantees
provided to individuals from national constitutions and international
treaties does not apply to ICANN. Surely ICANN would not suggest its
governance model exempts it from providing previously guaranteed
protections for civil liberties. Yet that is exactly what is proposed
in DAG4 and must be removed for the next version.
It also worth reminding that ICANN's Non-Commercial Users Constituency
(NCUC) and its At-Large Advisory Community have both lodged objections
to the MAPO policy since it was first proposed. NCUC did not vote in
favor of the MAPO measures when they were before the GNSO Council (see
NCUC's dissenting opinion below) and the opposition from the non-
commercial stakeholders to MAPO-based objections continues to remain
strong.
ICANN should uphold freedom of expression values and remove the
illegitimate MAPO-based objections to new gtlds so these concerns can
be adjudicated in the appropriate legitimate fora at the national
level. The sooner ICANN realizes its only practical course of action
is throw MAPO out, the sooner it can get on with introducing new gtlds.
Respectfully submitted,
Robin Gross
IP Justice
____________________________________________________________
From:
http://ipjustice.org/ICANN/drafts/rec6ncuc.html
See also:
http://ipjustice.org/wp/campaigns/icann/gtlds/
STATEMENT OF DISSENT ON RECOMMENDATION #6 OF
GNSO?S NEW GTLD REPORT FROM
THE NON-COMMERCIAL USERS CONSTITUENCY (NCUC)
20 July 2007
(.pdf file)
NCUC supports most of the recommendations in the GNSO?s Final Report,
but Recommendation #6 is one we cannot support.
We oppose Recommendation #6 for the following reasons:
1) It will completely undermine ICANN?s efforts to make the gTLD
application process predictable, and instead make the evaluation
process arbitrary, subjective and political;
2) It will have the effect of suppressing free and diverse expression;
3) It exposes ICANN to litigation risks;
4) It takes ICANN too far away from its technical coordination mission
and into areas of legislating morality and public order.
We also believe that the objective of Recommendation #6 is unclear, in
that much of its desirable substance is already covered by
Recommendation #3. At a minimum, we believe that the words ?relating
to morality and public order? must be struck from the recommendation.
1) Predictability, Transparency and Objectivity
Recommendation #6 poses severe implementation problems. It makes it
impossible to achieve the GNSO?s goals of predictable and transparent
evaluation criteria for new gTLDs.
Principle 1 of the New gTLD Report states that the evaluation process
must be ?predictable,? and Recommendation #1 states that the
evaluation criteria must be transparent, predictable, and fully
available to applicants prior to their application.
NCUC strongly supports those guidelines. But no gTLD applicant can
possibly know in advance what people or governments in a far away land
will object to as ?immoral? or contrary to ?public order.? When
applications are challenged on these grounds, applicants cannot
possibly know what decision an expert panel ? which will be assembled
on an ad hoc basis with no precedent to draw on ? will make about it.
Decisions by expert panels on ?morality and public order? must be
subjective and arbitrary, because there is no settled and well-
established international law regarding the relationship between TLD
strings and morality and public order. There is no single ?community
standard? of morality that ICANN can apply to all applicants in every
corner of the globe. What is considered ?immoral? in Teheran may be
easily accepted in Los Angeles or Stockholm; what is considered a
threat to ?public order? in China and Russia may not be in Brazil and
Qatar.
2) Suppression of expression of controversial views
gTLD applicants will respond to the uncertainty inherent in a vague
?morality and public order? standard and lack of clear standards by
suppressing and avoiding any ideas that might generate controversy.
Applicants will have to invest sizable sums of money to develop a gTLD
application and see it through the ICANN process. Most of them will
avoid risking a challenge under Recommendation #6. In other words, the
presence of Recommendation #6 will result in self- censorship by most
applicants.
That policy would strip citizens everywhere of their rights to express
controversial ideas because someone else finds them offensive. This
policy recommendation ignores international and national laws, in
particular freedom of expression guarantees that permit the expression
of ?immoral? or otherwise controversial speech on the Internet.
3) Risk of litigation
Some people in the ICANN community are under the mistaken impression
that suppressing controversial gTLDs will protect it from litigation.
Nothing could be further from the truth. By introducing subjective and
culturally divisive standards into the evaluation process
Recommendation #6 will increase the likelihood of litigation.
ICANN operates under authority from the US Commerce Department. It is
undisputed that the US Commerce Department is prohibited from
censoring the expression of US citizens in the manner proposed by
Recommendation #6. The US Government cannot ?contract away? the
constitutional protections of its citizens to ICANN any more than it
can engage in the censorship itself.
Adoption of Recommendation #6 invites litigation against ICANN to
determine whether its censorship policy is compatible with the US
First Amendment. An ICANN decision to suppress a gTLD string that
would be permitted under US law could and probably would lead to legal
challenges to the decision as a form of US Government action.
If ICANN left the adjudication of legal rights up to courts, it could
avoid the legal risk and legal liability that this policy of
censorship brings upon it.
4) ICANN?s mission and core values
Recommendation #6 exceeds the scope of ICANN?s technical mission. It
asks ICANN to create rules and adjudicate disputes about what is
permissible expression. It enables it to censor expression in domain
names that would be lawful in some countries. It would require ICANN
and ?expert panels? to make decisions about permitting top-level
domain names based on arbitrary ?morality? judgments and other
subjective criteria. Under Recommendation #6, ICANN will evaluate
domain names based on ideas about ?morality and public order? --
concepts for which there are varying interpretations, in both law and
culture, in various parts of the world. Recommendation #6 risks
turning ICANN into the arbiter of ?morality? and ?appropriate? public
policy through global rules.
This new role for ICANN conflicts with its intended narrow technical
mission, as embodied in its mission and core values. ICANN holds no
legitimate authority to regulate in this entirely non-technical area
and adjudicate the legal rights of others. This recommendation takes
the adjudication of people?s rights to use domain names out of the
hands of democratically elected representatives and into the hands of
?expert panels? or ICANN staff and board with no public accountability.
Besides exceeding the scope of ICANN?s authority, Recommendation #6
seems unsure of its objective. It mandates ?morality and public order?
in domain names, but then lists, as examples of the type of rights to
protect, the WTO TRIPS Agreement and all 24 World Intellectual
Property (WIPO) Treaties, which deal with economic and trade rights,
and have little to do with ?morality and public order?. Protection for
intellectual property rights was fully covered in Recommendation #3,
and no explanation has been provided as to why intellectual property
rights would be listed again in a recommendation on ?morality and
public order?, an entirely separate concept.
In conclusion Recommendation #6 exceeds ICANN?s authority, ignores
Internet users? free expression rights, and its adoption would impose
an enormous burden on and liability for ICANN. It should not be
adopted by the Board of Directors in the final policy decision for new
gtlds.
------------
From:
http://ipjustice.org/ICANN/drafts/PDP-Dec05-NCUC-CONST-STMT-JUNE2007.htm
NCUC Impact Statement on New GTLD Recommendations 12 June 2007
[...]
Recommendation 6
Again, we welcome the amendment to include recognition of rights to
Freedom of Expression.[22] It is quite clear that this applies to
single words and to strings, see Taubman v. Webfeats 319 F.3d 770 (6th
Circuit 2003) ("The rooftops of our past have evolved into the
Internet domain names of our present. We find that the domain name is
a type of public expression, no different in scope than a billboard or
a pulpit, and [defendant] has a First Amendment right to express his
opinion about [plaintiff], as long as his speech is not commercially
misleading, the Lanham Act cannot be summoned to prevent it).
We welcome the deletion of GAC Public Policy principle 2.1 from the
GNSO?s recommendations. We objected in the strongest possible terms to
the vague standard of ?sensitivities,? which would subject all to the
most restrictive views and had no place in the international legal
order. GAC quoted selectively from the preamble to the 1948 Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) without reference to the enumerated
specific right to Freedom of Expression in Article 19.[23] The UDHR
Art. 29(2) provides the only permitted limits.[24] Similarly, the
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) mandates Freedom of
Expression should only be subject to limits prescribed by law[25] and
necessary in a democratic society for one of the enumerated purposes,
see Article 10[26] which also applies to commercial expression.[27]
Strict scrutiny is applied to any attempt to limit the free expression
of an idea.[28]
This Recommendation is borrowed from trade mark law[29] and the French
concept of ?ordre public.?[30] This is now subject to Article 10
ECHR[31] and Freedom of Expression and the modern standard is high.
[32] While a few nations limit Free Expression by laws preventing hate
speech, and incitement to violence, lowering the threshold to
?sensitivities? is tantamount to mandating political correctness,[33]
forced hegemony, and is dangerous and to be resisted in every context.
It does not matter how laudable the public policy objective, ICANN
should remain content neutral.[34]
We oppose any string criteria based on morality and public order. The
context is not exclusively commercial speech so trade mark law is not
an analogy as registration of marks on government Registers involves
an element of state sanction[35] that is not true of the DNS (though
many seek it).[36] There is no consensus on the regulation of morality
in non-commercial speech in international law. We refer to the quote
from Taubman (above)?the TLDs are billboards. Democracies do not have
laws requiring people to speak or behave morally. Some nations do have
such rules ? undemocratic theocracies mainly.
ICANN should stick to its technical remit, which it risks grossly
exceeding here. It should defer to applicable national laws on matters
of public order and morality. Applicants should comply with the
content laws in the countries in which they operate.[37] The only real
issue is, in any event, public order which is already served by
nations? own laws on obscenity, fighting words, hate speech and
incitement.
Please be aware that criticism, satire, parody of others and their
beliefs are a fundamental tenant of Freedom of Expression[38] which
includes the right to offend. ICANN must ensure this in practice and
mere references to Treaties and Conventions do not go far enough.
IP JUSTICE
Robin Gross, Executive Director
1192 Haight Street, San Francisco, CA 94117 USA
p: +1-415-553-6261 f: +1-415-462-6451
w: http://www.ipjustice.org e: robin@ipjustice.org
# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
# archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org